~~NOTOC~~ ======== Infographics ======== ==== General Information ==== |Name|Infographics| |Abbreviation|ING| |Learning Cost|80| |Playing Cost|100| |Suggested Phases|1,2| == Engineers == ^ Mechanical Engineer ^ Industrial Design ^ System Engineer ^ Electrical Engineer ^ Production Engineer ^ Software Engineer ^ |✗|✔|✗|✗|✗|✗| == Technique and Issue Views == ^ BusinessNeeds ^ Stakeholder ^ Stakeholder Needs ^ System Requirements ^ System Structure Architecture ^ |✗|✔|✔|✔|✗| ^System Functional Architecture ^Detail Hardware Design ^Detail Service Design ^Detail Software Design ^Manufacturing Operations ^ |✗|✗|✗|✗|✗| == Technique Traits == ^Identify Stakeholders ^Elicit Needs ^Remove Ambiguity ^Layman's Terms ^Technical Terms ^Teamworkings^ | 2 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 2 | ^Traceability ^Prioritizing ^Exploring Breadth ^Inside the Box ^Outside the box ^ V&V^ | 3 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | == Verification and Validation == ^Analysis ^Calculus ^Inspection ^Demonstration ^Test ^ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ==== Description ==== Infographics were created as a visual alternative to presenting information by plain text. By means of symbols or schematic pictures information can be transferred to the reader in an instance [1]. The issue it solves is best explained by the saying that a picture is worth a thousand words [2]. This means that visualizations can have a high information density and at the same time give a clear overview. The first infographics were illustrations, graphs and charts used in the context of scientific and economic information presentation [3]. Infographics date back to the 17th and 18th century of which the visual representation of the march of Napoleon on Moscow is particularly well-known. This illustration is a map with various axis combining time, locations and numbers [4]. {{:fInfographics.png|}}